World’s Worst Countries for Business
, On Friday 4 November 2011
Yahoo! Finance
As the U.S. and Europe grapple with slowing growth, more businesses
are turning attention to emerging markets for expansion and profits.
Foreign direct investment (FDI) into countries such as Brazil, Russia,
and Indonesia are at record highs, with Brazil attracting $48.4 billion
dollars in 2010, an increase of 87 percent over 2009.
While it's difficult to resist the growth opportunities provided by
emerging markets, running a successful business in many of these
countries is far from easy.
We put together a list of the 10 most difficult countries to do
business in from 50 of the world's largest economies. Our top 10
rankings are based on the World Bank's "Ease of Doing Business" study,
which includes 183 countries.
The rankings take into account 10 leading indicators, such as the
ease of starting a business, getting construction permits, paying taxes,
and investor protection laws, to name a few.
The 2010 FDI data are from the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD), while the GDP numbers are from the World Bank.
Our list includes some economic superpowers, as well as some minnows.
Click ahead to find out which countries are the most difficult to do
business in.
10. Argentina
2010 GDP: $388 billion
2010 FDI: $6.3 billion
2010 FDI: $6.3 billion
Argentina is one of three South American nations to make the list of the worst countries to do business in.
Out of 10 key indicators for doing business, Argentina has one of the
lowest rankings when it comes to acquiring a construction permit. It
takes about one year to get a construction permit, compared with an
average of about seven months for Latin American countries and the
Caribbean. Starting a business in Argentina takes 26 days, double the
time it takes on average in Organization for Economic Co-Operation and
Development (OECD) countries.
Argentina defaulted on its debt in 2002, which led to foreign
investors fleeing South America's second-biggest economy. Since then,
the government has enforced a number of measures to stem money flowing
out of the country, such as nationalizing its $24 billion pension fund
industry and limiting the purchase of farmland by foreigners.
Last week, Cristina Kirchner's government ordered oil and gas
companies to repatriate all future export revenue, forcing miners to
potentially increase costs stemming from foreign exchange and taxation.
The move may make it harder for Argentina to attract foreign direct
investment, which the UN estimates fell by 30 percent in the first half
of this year.
9. Russia
2010 GDP: $1.5 trillion
2010 FDI: $41.2 billion
2010 FDI: $41.2 billion
Russia may be one of the world's fastest growing economies, but it is also one of the most difficult places to do business in.
The country is the toughest place in the world for a business to get
an electricity connection, taking nearly nine and half months — almost
double the time it takes in the rest of Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
Russia's upcoming presidential elections have further derailed plans to
reform the world's fourth biggest power market. Earlier this year,
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is running for president in 2012,
said there would be no hike in electricity prices over the first half of
next year, a move meant to appease voters ahead of the March elections.
Russian household electricity bills are among the lowest in Europe
and industry experts say prices need to rise to fund reinvestment and
growth in the sector. The lack of capital expenditure in the power
sector is also stoking fears of a likelihood of more accidents and power
outages like Moscow's blackouts last Christmas, which suspended flights
and left thousands without power.
Russia also ranks near the bottom when it comes to cross-border
trade. It takes more than three times longer to export something from
Russia compared with the average for OECD countries. Trade with Russia
may become easier after December, however, when the country is expected
to finally become part of the World Trade Organization (WTO), 18 years
after first applying to join the 153-member group. Russia is currently
the largest economy outside the WTO.
8. Brazil
2010 GDP: $2.1 trillion
2010 FDI: $48.4 billion
2010 FDI: $48.4 billion
Brazil is the world's eighth largest economy, and its GDP growth in
2010 was 7.5 percent, making it attractive for foreign investment. While
this economic giant provides a huge opportunity there are also several
major hurdles to doing business here.
Brazil has one of the highest tax burdens of any major economy, at
around 37 percent of GDP. Firms spend about 2,600 hours a year,
equivalent to three and half months, filling tax forms in Brazil. Firms
are charged a total tax rate of more than 67 percent, according to the
World Bank, which is 20 percent higher than the average for the rest of
Latin America and the Caribbean.
Another big issue facing businesses in Brazil is getting construction
permits. Companies spend nearly 470 days completing 17 procedures to
obtain a permit, which is over triple the time it takes on average in
OECD countries.
Brazil is set to host the 2014 FIFA World Cup and the 2016 Olympics.
But construction of stadiums and airport terminals for the events has
been delayed amid accusations of government corruption. The country's
Sports Minister Orlando Silva is under growing pressure to resign after
more evidence emerged last month that he allegedly got $23 million in
kickbacks for government contracts, for himself and the ruling communist
party.
7. Indonesia
2010 GDP: $706.6 billion
2010 FDI: $13.3 billion
2010 FDI: $13.3 billion
Indonesia, Southeast Asia's biggest economy, is one of three Asian
countries to make the list of the world's worst places to do business
in.
The country is one of the most difficult places to start a business.
It takes one and half months to launch a business in Indonesia, nearly
three and half times longer than the average for all OECD countries.
Getting electricity in the world's fourth most populous nation also
takes 20 days longer than in the rest of East Asia and the Pacific.
Indonesia's infrastructure problems have long been blamed for
hampering its growth. Four out of its five busiest international
airports are operating above capacity and about 15 million households
have no access to electricity.
The country wants private investors to provide at least two-thirds of
the $150 billion needed for infrastructure development in the next five
years. In July, French firms, including engineering heavyweight Alstom,
pledged more than $2.5 billion in energy and infrastructure
investments. In the same month, three Chinese companies expressed
interest in investing about $3 billion to build ports, toll roads and
railway tracks in the main Java island. China, the world's biggest
energy consumer, is keen to tap into Indonesia's abundant coal and other
resources. Earlier this year, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao pledged $9
billion in loans to support Indonesia's infrastructure development.
6. India
2010 GDP: $1.73 trillion
2010 FDI: $24.6 billion
2010 FDI: $24.6 billion
India, the world's fourth largest economy, has seen quarterly GDP
growth of around 7.5 percent over the past decade, but it is also one of
the most difficult countries to do business in.
Stories of corruption in the government are rampant in India and it
is the second worst country in the world when it comes to enforcing a
business contract, behind East Timor. It takes on average of nearly four
years to enforce a contract through India's courts, in comparison to
three years in the rest of South Asia and more than one year on average
in OECD countries.
It also ranks among the bottom three globally when it comes to
dealing with construction permits, taking more than seven and half
months to get one.
Recently, there have been growing protests from India's urban middle
class against endemic political corruption and bureaucracy. Recent
government scandals — including a bribery scheme involving the sale of
telecom spectrum that may have cost the state up to $39 billion in
revenues — has heightened the public's growing discontent with
politicians.
Despite its unfriendly business environment, UNCTAD forecasts India,
home to the world's second biggest population, will be among the top
five attractive destinations for international investors over 2010-12.
5. Nigeria
2010 GDP: $194 billion
2010 FDI: $6.1 billion
2010 FDI: $6.1 billion
Nigeria is Africa's largest oil producer, therefore a big draw for some of the world's biggest energy and resources companies.
Political unrest and growing ethnic and religious tensions make the
country one of the worst places to do business in, however. Nigeria
ranks among the lowest in the world when it comes to getting electricity
and registering property for business. It takes nearly three months to
get through the 13 procedures required to register a property, compared
to one month in OECD countries.
The oil trade has also fueled violence and corruption in the Niger
delta, where energy giants, including Royal Dutch Shell, have been
forced to shut down production often due to a surge in oil thefts.
Despite being an oil-rich country, the majority of its population
live on less than $2 a day and are exposed to dangerous levels of
pollution. Nigeria's political instability reached a head last year,
when its then-president Umaru Musa Yar'Adua left the country for medical
treatment without transferring power, creating a leaderless state for
two and half months before an acting president was reinstated.
4. Philippines
2010 GDP: $199.6 billion
2010 FDI: $1.7 billion
2010 FDI: $1.7 billion
The Philippines is the lowest ranked Asian country on the list of the
most difficult places to do business in. It attracted just 2.5 percent
of the $76.5 billion of foreign direct investment that flowed to the 10
members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 2010.
Despite having massive untapped mineral wealth, a key geographical
location between Southeast and North Asia and a large, growing
English-speaking population, the country has fallen behind its neighbors
in economic growth.
Foreign businesses are wary of the Philippine's unstable legal
system, violence, and bureaucracy. Its ease of doing business ranking
from the World Bank fell a further two spots this year from 2010. The
country also ranks among the lowest when it comes to starting a
business, and resolving insolvency, with the latter taking more than
five and half years, compared with an average one year and seven months
in OECD countries.
Last month, Philippine President Benigno Aquino made trips to the
U.S., China, and Japan to push for investments, as well as to send a
message that things are changing in the country, after two previous
administrations were dogged by corruption allegations. Aquino's trip to
China resulted in $7 billion to $9 billion of potential investments.
The Philippines also jumped 10 places to 75th in the World Economic Forum's global competitiveness index this year.
3. Algeria
2010 GDP: $159.4 billion
2010 FDI: $2.3 billion
2010 FDI: $2.3 billion
Algeria is one of five oil-rich nations to make the list of the 10
most difficult countries to do business in. Its economy is heavily
reliant on the hydrocarbon sector as one of the biggest suppliers of
natural gas to the European Union.
Algeria ranks among the lowest in the world when it comes to starting
a business, getting electricity, registering property, and filing
taxes. It takes 48 days to register a property in Algeria, compared with
about a month in the average of OECD countries. Getting an electricity
connection takes more than five months, compared with two and half
months in the rest of North Africa and the Middle East.
The recent political unrest across the Arab world has had a positive
impact on Algeria's social and political landscape, however, with the
government being prompted to go on a spending spree. This has resulted
in public sector wage increases, generous food subsidies, and handouts
to the unemployed. The International Monetary Fund has also forecast
that the Algerian economy will grow 3 percent in 2012. Growth in the
long term could be threatened, however, by the fact that gas production
from its biggest oil fields has reached a plateau and will soon start to
decline.
2. Ukraine
2010 GDP: $137.9 billion
2010 FDI: $6.5 billion
2010 FDI: $6.5 billion
Ukraine is Europe's second largest country and one of two Eastern
European nations to make the list of the worst places to do business in.
Since gaining independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, the country
has been caught between seeking closer integration with Western Europe
and reconciling with Russia, which provides for most of Ukraine's energy
needs.
The country ranks among the very bottom when it comes to ease of
paying taxes, dealing with construction permits, and access to
electricity, to name a few. It takes 27 days for businesses to pay taxes
in Ukraine, with the total tax rate at more than 57 percent of a
company's profit. The amount of time it takes to pay taxes is more than
double the time in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. Getting a
construction permit also requires more than double the number of days
than it does on average in OECD countries.
Ukraine is not new to political unrest. In 2004, after an allegedly
rigged election, Viktor Yanukovych, who supported reconciliation with
Russia, came to power and sparked mass protests, known as the "Orange
Revolution." After a repeat election, pro-West supporter Viktor
Yushchenko was sworn in as president in 2005. Political bickering
continues to attract world attention, however. Last month, one of the
leaders of the Orange Revolution and former Prime Minister Yulia
Tymoshenko was sent to jail for seven years on charges of abuse of power
involving a gas deal with Russia in 2009.
1. Venezuela
2010 GDP: $387.8 billion
2010 FDI: -$1.4 billion
2010 FDI: -$1.4 billion
Out the world's 50 biggest economies, Venezuela ranks as the most difficult place to do business in.
The South American nation is among the very bottom when it comes to
ease of paying taxes, getting credit, investor protection laws, and
cross-border trading, to name a few. Firms spend 864 hours a year paying
taxes in Venezuela, more than double the amount of time it takes in the
rest of Latin America and the Caribbean. The gap is even wider when you
compare with OECD countries, where it takes about a fourth of the time
to file taxes.
Despite having some of the world's largest oil and natural gas
reserves, most Venezuelans live in poverty. The country's socialist
revolution led by President Hugo Chavez has brought about radical
reforms, with the major one being the nationalization of much of the
economy, especially the oil sector, and strict currency controls. All
these pose difficulties for private businesses. For example, withdrawing
money from your bank account requires not only signatures, but
fingerprints and in some cases even a photograph. ATMs have strict daily
limits.
Identification is even required for the smallest purchases, such as
groceries. Inflation is also another major issue in Venezuela. Annual
inflation for the 12-month period through September totaled 26.5
percent, showing the country's economy could be getting out of control.












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